John Primatt Maud (13 June 186021 March 1932) was the second Bishop of Kensington from 1911 until his death 21 years later.[1] He was born on 13 June 1860 and educated at Keble College, Oxford.[2]
Maud was ordained in 1887 and his first appointment was a curacy at St John the Evangelist, Westminster.[3] He was Vicar at Chapel Allerton, Leeds from 1890 and at St Mary Redcliffe, 1904–11. He was consecrated a bishop on the Feast of the Holy Innocents 1911 (28 December), at St Paul's Cathedral, by Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury. He served as Bishop of Kensington — the suffragan bishop to the Bishop of London with delegated responsibility for "West London" — until he died in post on 21 March 1932 aged 71.
Maud's son John Lord Redcliffe-Maud had a distinguished career.[4] [5]